Parliamentary Debates (HANSARD) THIRTY-NINTH PARLIAMENT FIRST SESSION 2015 LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL Thursday, 23 April 2015 Legislative Council Thursday, 23 April 2015 The PRESIDENT (Hon Barry House) took the chair at 10.00 am, and read prayers. VISITORS — CHISHOLM CATHOLIC COLLEGE Statement by President THE PRESIDENT (Hon Barry House): I welcome to the public gallery students from Chisholm Catholic College. I believe they are year 11 students. Welcome to the Legislative Council, and I hope you enjoy your tour of Parliament House. GAZETTED WATERSKIING AREA — ROWLES LAGOON Petition HON MARK LEWIS (Mining and Pastoral) [10.03 am]: I present a petition with 518 signatures couched in the following terms — To the Honourable the President and Members of the Legislative Council of the Parliament of Western Australia in Parliament assembled. We the undersigned residents of Western Australia are in support of legalising a gazetted ski area on Rowles Lagoon whenever it has available water to ski safely. A section of Rowles has a traditional use for skiing and has been gazetted in the past by the Department of Transport but recently this is being opposed by the Department of Parks and Wildlife. The park needs to cater for recreation and conservation which we believe can operate together if zoned and managed appropriately. Your petitioners therefore respectfully request the Legislative Council to recommend re-gazettal of Rowles Lagoon as a water ski area to allow the goldfields people an area to undertake water skiing whenever it has available water to ski safely. Your petitioners therefore humbly pray that you will give this matter earnest consideration and your petitioners, as in duty bound, will ever pray. [See paper 2807.] PAPERS TABLED Papers were tabled and ordered to lie upon the table of the house. STANDING COMMITTEE ON LEGISLATION Twenty-seventh Report — “Inquiry into a Demise of the Crown Statute — Extension of Time” — Tabling and Adoption HON ROBYN McSWEENEY (South West) [10.05 am]: I am directed to report that the Standing Committee on Legislation has resolved that the time in which it has to report on the inquiry into demise of the crown statute be extended. The PRESIDENT: Does the member wish to make a statement on behalf of the committee? Hon ROBYN McSWEENEY: No, Mr President. I move without notice — That the reporting date for the Standing Committee on Legislation’s inquiry into the demise of the crown statute be extended from 14 May 2015 to 13 August 2015. The PRESIDENT: Can I have a copy of that motion, please? Hon Robyn McSweeney has presented the twenty-seventh report of the Standing Committee on Legislation, “Inquiry into a Demise of the Crown Statute” and sought an extension of time. There is no statement to support that extension of time, and the motion moved without notice states — That the reporting date for the Standing Committee on Legislation’s inquiry into the demise of the crown statute be extended from 14 May 2015 to 13 August 2015. HON SUE ELLERY (South Metropolitan — Leader of the Opposition) [10.06 am]: I was not going to stand because I do not think there is any reason to be concerned about this motion. I will just make the point that it would be helpful if the house understood a little of the context. I suspect there is nothing controversial at all and we will support the motion, but it would be helpful to the house if we knew what we were doing. Question put and passed. [See paper 2808.] [COUNCIL — Thursday, 23 April 2015] 2765 The PRESIDENT: I endorse that statement. Normally when an extension of time is sought an explanation is given to the house by the committee of the circumstances for requesting an extension. DISALLOWANCE MOTIONS Notices of Motion 1. City of Gosnells Cat Local Law 2014. 2. City of Joondalup Local Government and Public Property Local Law 2014. 3. Shire of Trayning Public Places and Local Government Property Local Law 2014. Notice of motions given by Hon Robin Chapple. ANZAC CENTENARY COMMEMORATIONS Motion HON SUE ELLERY (South Metropolitan — Leader of the Opposition) [10.09 am] — without notice: I move — That this house recognises the significance of the 100th anniversary of the ANZAC landing at Gallipoli and supports — (a) the continued recognition of Anzac Day as a solemn commemoration of the sacrifice of all service men and women; (b) the recognition of those returned service men and women who live with mental and physical health problems; and (c) the recognition of the sacrifice and suffering experienced by the families of service men and women serving overseas. Depending on where in the chamber members sit, normally on a Thursday morning we would either be condemning or congratulating each other. On Thursday mornings we tend to focus on holding each other to account on matters political. As one of my colleagues described it, we talk about ourselves. Today is not a normal Thursday morning; it is the Thursday before the centenary of the landing at Gallipoli peninsula and what became known as Anzac Cove so it is appropriate that we do something different. It is appropriate that we commit to keep recognising Anzac Day as a solemn commemoration of the sacrifice and it is appropriate that we commit to support those who have returned from acts of service, be it in war, peacekeeping or police action, and live with mental and physical issues. It is also appropriate that we continue to support the families of those who have lost loved ones and those who have returned with ongoing issues who need our recognition and support. A terrible and ultimately failed attempt to break through the Turkish lines on the peninsula began on 25 April 1915. It says something about us that we choose not to celebrate a great victory, but to celebrate what was a failure. Other members may have watched this week, as I did, the ABC program Why Anzac, which featured Sam Neill, who strides both New Zealand and Australia, although of course we claim him as Australian. He spends half his time in New Zealand and the other half in Australia. The program provided insightful commentary on both our national psyches. At one point during the show he talked about—we would all have experience of this—travelling around the world, particularly in European countries, but also in the United States, and seeing memorials to great war heroes and great battles. Australians and New Zealanders do not focus on those things on Anzac Day; rather, we focus on what was effectively a failed military exercise. I think it goes to our national psyche of calling a spade a spade, of being direct, of not getting above ourselves and of—I do not know whether this is a word, but if it is not, I will create it—“ratbaggery” because we challenge authority. It goes to what makes us different from those particularly in the older European countries, because we celebrate and focus on a campaign that failed as a result of the terrible leadership of those in charge. The four years of World War I have been described as marking a deep and permanent shift in our nation. The number involved is enormous with more than 400 000 Australians enlisting. Of those, 32 231 came from Western Australia; indeed, Western Australia provided the largest percentage of any of the states with 9.9 per cent of our population enlisting in World War I, with the next highest being New South Wales at 8.8 per cent. Four years after the war began, 60 000 Australians had died and many more were hospitalised and suffered ongoing and often silent consequences. When the war was over, more than half of the Australian soldiers who survived were discharged as medically unfit and those who were not discharged as medically unfit did not come back unscathed. Sixty per cent of those who returned applied for war pension assistance in the post-war period because they needed assistance with ongoing health problems. We have all heard the stories, even among our families, of those who never spoke about the war and who never sought assistance. To put those numbers into perspective, Australia’s casualties were almost 65 per cent. There are 36 members in this chamber and another four or five staff members, which is 40-odd people. If we apply that 65 per cent to the number of people in this 2766 [COUNCIL — Thursday, 23 April 2015] chamber, 27 of us would not come back. That is an enormous number and it would have enormous consequences. Indeed, an enormous number of the population were deeply and permanently affected by the war. Much has been written about the day and students of history would know this, but on 25 April 1915 members of the Australian Imperial Force landed at Gallipoli with troops from New Zealand, Britain and France. This began a campaign that ended with the evacuation of troops on 19 and 20 December 1915. Following Gallipoli, Australian forces fought campaigns on the Western Front and in the Middle East. Throughout 1916 and 1917, losses on the Western Front were heavy and gains were small. The Australians reached the peak of their fighting performance on 4 July 1918 in the Battle of Hamel. From 8 August, they took part in a series of decisive advances until Germany surrendered on 11 November. The First World War remains for Australia, as it remains for many nations, the most costly conflict in terms of casualties and deaths. With a population of fewer than five million people, 416 809 men enlisted in the war—although there were no women fighting in the war, they certainly served in the nursing, ambulance and medical corps—and of those, 60 000 were killed and 156 000 were wounded, gassed or taken prisoner.
Details
-
File Typepdf
-
Upload Time-
-
Content LanguagesEnglish
-
Upload UserAnonymous/Not logged-in
-
File Pages65 Page
-
File Size-